Pack the Hearing Room & Stop Cuts to the Safety Net

On Thursday May 10, the Fair Budget Coalition sponsored A Day in The Strife, an action at the Wilson Building in protest of Mayor Gray’s proposed cuts to the city’s budget, most of which will once again fall  on the backs of the poor.  For details of what’s in the budget and what’s left out, a good article to read is Kesh Ladduwahetty’s Washington Post article A Tea Party Budget for D.C.  The following video from a Day in the Strife highlights what’s at stake for DC residents who will be directly impacted.

Mother’s Day Monday

A Day In The Strife

Cross-posted from the Fair Budget Coalition Facebook Page

When faced with the impossible choices that many DC residents have to make, what would DC Council members choose?  Pay rent or buy groceries?  Buy a metrocard to get to work or school supplies for your kids?

Over the last few years the Mayor and DC Council have cut funding to safety net programs like affordable housing, homeless serivces, TANF, Child Care and more. This year millions more in cuts to these programs are on the chopping block. Meanwhile, DC residents are forced to make impossible choices to make ends meet.

Join us as we fight CUTS to the safety net and show the Councilmembers what it’s really like to live in poverty.

A DAY IN THE STRIFE: A Tour of Life on the Poverty Line
Thursday, May 10th: 10:00am-Noon
At the Wilson Building
1350 Pennsylvania Ave NW

Lunch will be provided
Bring your ID to enter the building

And BRING AN EXTRA SHOE to carry along as we tour! We want to ask Councilmembers to picture what it’s like to walk a mile in our shoes.

For more information contact 202-328-1262 or makeonecitypossible@gmail.com

To learn more about the campaign, visit: www.makeonecitypossible.com

This event is organized by the Fair Budget Coalition
@FairBudgetDC
www.facebook.com/FairBudgetDC

Another DC Budget Balanced on the Backs of the Poor?

Sam Ford Interviews Homeless for ABC 7

April 17, 2012, at his Ward 7 budget town hall meeting, Mayor Vince Gray said, “Just so people are clear. We’re not cutting those things. People will tell you anything. Sometimes they even think they’re right. We’re not cutting homeless services, we’re not cutting affordable housing, we’re not cutting Medicaid, we’re not cutting TANF (Temporary Aid to Needy Families) and we’re not cutting the Summer Youth Employment Program.” Despite this, advocates for social services and affordable housing programs, like the Fair Budget Coalition who’ve been organizing around these issues, will assure you that the mayor’s proposed budget will in no way meet the growing need of DC’s low- and even moderate-income residents in these difficult economic times. In particular, the homeless families living in DC General, whose numbers continue to grow, do not believe maintaining an increasingly tenuous status quo represents their needs or wishes as taxpaying citizens of the District of Columbia. These families made their feelings known at the DC City Council Budget Hearing on April 30, 2012. Only two elected officials, Council Chair Kwame Brown and Ward 8 Councilmember Marion Barry were present at the hearing. ABC 7’s Sam Ford and the Washington Times’ Andrew Harnick covered the story.

The above videos make clear that DC’s safety net isn’t meeting the needs of many of our residents, but given the time constraints of a local news broadcast, it doesn’t go into much depth. For more insight, it doesn’t hurt to follow the analysis of folks like Howard University professor David Schwartzman, who routinely follows the DC budget.

Cross-posted from The Mail @ DC Watch written by David Schwartzman

Our Mayor proposes another DC budget balanced on the backs of the poor; should we be surprised? On April 20, we learned that our former mayor, Anthony Williams, has been appointed as Chief Executive of the Federal City Council, the leading local think tank of the 1 percent, or is it the 0.1 percent? (Note that Frank Keating, the former Republican governor of Oklahoma and now president and CEO of the American Bankers Association, is the FCC president). Anthony Williams served on Mayor Gray’s transition team and was also just appointed to head the new Tax Revision Commission. As CFO of the Control Board, Anthony Williams was a key architect of the Urban Structural Adjustment Program that balanced our budget on the backs of our poor, while favoring the wealthy with tax cuts (the Tax Parity Act). The Control Board regime closed DC General Hospital, privatized municipal functions, cut the so-called safety net, and increased our income gap to record levels, while setting the course for Mayor Fenty’s agenda that brought this assault on our working and middle class majority to a new level. And Mayor Gray has not unexpectedly continued along the same road.

While our mayor and council deserve credit for their liberal policies regarding sexual orientation and immigrants rights, their economic and public education policies should brand them as Republicans posing as Democrats. For example, our mayor just endorsed new DCPS school closings based on an IFF study funded by the Walton Foundation (Walmart), opening up new opportunities for the semi-privatization of public education. Colbert King just characterized conservative Democrats one hundred years ago as favoring “the wealthy, to whom much has been given, have no stake in anybody else’s success,” http://tinyurl.com/6twrwpf, an apt description of most of our local Democratic elected officials, and of course the Republican posing as an Independent, David Catania. When will these Democrats follow President Obama’s example by at least claiming to go on an “Offense Over Taxes on the Wealthy,” a headline from the New York Times?

Now to address the DC budget process. For FY 2013, Mayor Gray has proposed even more hurtful budget cuts in low income programs, amounting to roughly seventy million dollars, which include programs involving health care coverage for low income residents, affordable housing, homeless services. and cash assistance for families with children (for details go to http://www.dcfpi.org). This proposal comes on top of $239 million already cut from low income programs since 2008, according to the DC Fiscal Policy Institute’s budget data. And while the mayor and the council squabble about where to spend the $79 million surplus, specifically whether to pay back city employees for their four-day furlough taken at the beginning of 2011, the elephant sitting in the Wilson Building remains unnoticed, the under-taxed, now growing income of the top 5 percent of DC residents, whose family income is above $250,000 per year (note too that the furlough subtracted four days of pay from all affected, hence putting the greatest burden on the lowest paid employees). After the small tax hike on the wealthy passed last year, no one on the council is talking yet about another hike. Unless challenged by a relentless lobby, they will go ahead and pass another austerity budget, once again balancing it on the backs of the poor and near poor, including the former middle class. According to Tavis Smiley and Cornel West in “The Rich and the Rest of Us: A Poverty Manifesto,” 150 million, or nearly half, of Americans are either poor or near poor, suffering from the lack of income security. In DC more than a majority of residents fall in that category. Fifty percent of DC’s Black children are living in poverty. Meanwhile the Washington Post tells us that the 1 percent are doing better than ever, with their minimum household income being $617,000. (Note: this minimum is lower than the ITEP minimum of $1.5 million for the top 1 percent of District families, excluding the elderly because the Census figures the Post relied on are underestimating the real income because of tax avoidance.)

Here are the latest DC tax statistics, updated by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP): the top 1 percent of DC families, with three million dollars of million income now pay a lower DC tax rate (6.1 percent) than the bottom 20 percent with $12,400 annual income (7.0 percent), while the working/middle class pays 9 to 10 percent, taking into account the federal deduction benefit, mostly helping the upper income families, restoring some of the money spent for their DC taxes. Yes, the total DC tax burden of the top 1 percent is now even lower than before the small hike on incremental income above $350,000 passed last year. According to ITEP, the very wealthy across the nation have found even more ways to hide their income from taxation.

There is an alternative: hike the overall tax burden of wealthy residents by no more than two cents on the dollar of family income, yielding two hundred million dollars a year in additional revenue, while at the same time tax relief for our low income and middle class residents could be provided, e.g., by coupling the District income tax deduction and exemption with the federal rates. The increased revenue should be targeted by legislation to restoring and expanding the gutted programs that serve low income residents, especially for affordable housing and income security (TANF and its supports that facilitate entry into the workforce earning living wages). And any budget surplus should likewise be targeted to restoring these programs. More badly needed revenue should come from curbing corporate welfare including unjustified tax abatements and subsidies, our mayor and council campaigning for PILOTS, payments in lieu of taxes from the World Bank, IMF, Fannie Mae, as well as making PEPCO pay its DC taxes and taking immediate steps to establish a DC Public Bank, investing our taxes into green economic development, living-wage jobs, and affordable housing. For more on the District government’s record since 2008, check out the Report on the State of Human Rights in DC: http://afsc.org/resource/report-state-human-rights-dc.

Tax Day Delegation

Empower DC's Tax Day Delegation, storming the gates of power at the Wilson Building.

As activists, we love to participate in demonstrations and marches, especially when they’re in a good cause and there are so many good causes.  But it’s also nice to step it up a notch and take specific demands to the people in power.  It’s a quieter, less showy form of activism, but necessary and effective in its own way.  On April 17, 2012 (tax day), Empower DC along with representatives from the Fair Budget Coalition, Jobs With Justice and DC for Democracy went to the Wilson Building to talk to our council members about how they’re spending our taxes.  Our first visit was to the hearing room, where the Committee of the Whole was meeting.  We’d brought along an information packet that included our take on the shortage of affordable housing in the city , the DC public school budget and the childcare subsidy program.  All these issues the council and the mayor influence through policy, legislation and funding.  Council members and their staff (very important cogs in the legislative apparatus) are usually pretty knowledgeable when it comes to how much money is being put into or taken out of the programs that many low- and moderate-income DC residents depend on, but they’re not so knowledgeable when asked how cutting those programs will impact DC residents.  That’s why activists, organizers and community members who are impacted need to educate our elected officials.

Here’s an audio snippet of one of our office visits.  The position of the recording device was not ideal, so some of the audio is a little hard to understand but it’s well worth the entire 3-minutes.
[haiku url=”http://www.grassrootsmediaproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Tax-Day-Delegation.mp3″ title=”Tax Day Delegation” style=”color: #003300]

Although Empower DC child care organizer Sequnely Gray, who is featured in the above audio, expressing her concerns passionately about the plight of DC’s homeless families, she was there primarily to discuss the child care subsidy program.  There is so much overlap between the issues that local progressives care about, it doesn’t always make sense to try to tease them apart.  The DC residents who are most impacted by this year’s round of budget cuts don’t even have the option.  The parent who needs the child care subsidy so he or she can work is at risks losing their job without it.  Without a job, what happens to the money for rent or for food?  When one program fails you, the others become all the more necessary.  As activists and organizers it’s important that we understand all of the programs that are critical to the city’s safety net.  To that end, I’ve posted below the information that Sequnely put together regarding the subsidized child care program.

Here’s a link to the Demands to Fully Fund the Subsidized Child Care Program below.  I hope to post more info regarding programs that will be impacted by the budget in the weeks leading up to the city council’s vote on the 2013 budget at the end of May.   Empower DC is planning more advocacy days at the at the city council.  Stay tuned to this channel for more on that.  In the meantime, feel free to download the child care demands and do a little advocacy on your own.  Because frankly, DC residents who are also parents can’t work without quality, affordable child care.